Going Back 6,000 years

Punjab is the wellspring of Indian culture. Traditional literature
the Ramayana and Mahabharata, the Puranas, the Vedas,
all take us back to Punjab. Archaeolgiststs find the earliest
evidence of recognisably Indian civilisation in the excavation of
Punjab's Harappan sites. The uninterrupted continuity of Indian
culture flows forth from ancient Punjab.

Artifacts dating back to the Pleistocene Age have been found in
the valley of Kangra, Pehalgam, and Hoshiarpur. These finds
testify to the cultural unity extending to the whole of the
region. The Harappa-Ropar and Sanghol civilisations were the
outcome of the culture that developed over a vast area. The
Harappan civilisation perhaps was overwhelmed by the village folk,
who, although did not belong to a different culture, represented a
different pattern of life.

There is no conclusive evidence to prove that the authors of the
Rig Veda came to the land of seven rivers from any outside
country. The whole complex of Rigvedic hymns shows them settled in
this region from the outset and considering it their sacred land
and original home .

Sage Priyamedha Sindhukshit in the famous ‘Hymn of Rivers"
(Nadi-stuti) after invoking the favour of rivers soars to a high
pitch of exultation in his reference to the Sindhu. He clearly
states that his ancestors were the inhabitants of the land through
which the river flowed from ages immemorial.

The
Vedic and the later Epic periods of the Punjab were socially and
culturally the most prolific. The Rig Veda was composed here.

During the period quite a number of centres learning and culture
were established. Panini and Vishnu Gupta were associated with
this.religion , Philosophy, grammer, law, astrology, medicine and
warfare were taught . Yasak’s Nirkuta and Panini’s Ashtadhyayi
are those classic creations of which help us to understand the
language and culture of the ancient Punjab.

The field of action of the Ramayana is believed to be outside the
Punjab but the tradition maintains that Valmiki composed the
Ramayana near the present Amritsar city and Kaikeyee belonged to
this region.

The
advent of Buddhism saw Punjab become, more than ever, a cultural
crossroad. A few years before the birth of Buddha (556 BC), the
armies of Darius I, king of Persia, had swept across Punjab and
made the area a protectorate of Persian empire.
This was a
fruitful interaction that ripened into the cultured and
sophisticated cities of Gandhara (present day northern
Pakistan-southern Afghanistan). To the Buddhists Punjab was Uttar
Path – the way to the North, to the valleys of Afghanistan, and
further on to Central Asia and China. In 327 BC Alexander invaded
Punjab, defeating Raja Paurava (Porus). The centuries that
followed brought more incursions from the north but the Indian
response was vigorous. This happened during the rules of the Mauryas, the Sungas, the Guptas and the Pushpabhuti.